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Baking (rec.food.baking) For bakers, would-be bakers, and fans and consumers of breads, pastries, cakes, pies, cookies, crackers, bagels, and other items commonly found in a bakery. Includes all methods of preparation, both conventional and not. |
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![]() Dave Bell wrote: > betsy wrote: > > Dave Bell wrote: > > > >>in her garden wrote: > >> > >> > >>>First post to this newsgroup. I want a nice, generic butter cake > >>>recipe that will fit into a 10" springform pan. 10" seems to be a nice > >>>size to serve 8. I usually serve this type of cake plain or topped > >>>with whipped cream, ice cream or fruit. > >>> > >>>If you either have a ready-sized recipe or you can tell me how to > >>>retool my (two 8" cake pans) recipe, that would be great. Or perhaps > >>>you know a website that discusses this? > >> > >>Well, the 10" pan relative to an 8" pan is 56% bigger. > >>(10*10/8*8 = 100/64 = 1.5625) > >>If it is also 25% deeper, that's almost exactly twice the volume. (1.95) > >>I would use the 2-8" recipe as-is, for size. > >> > >> > >>>If I were to use my (two 8" cake pans) recipe, I suspect I'd need to > >>>lengthen the baking time for my recipe, but would I need to lower/raise > >>>the baking temperature, too? > >> > >>Yes, I would lower the temp a little, say from 350F to 325F, and bake > >>somewhat longer. Start checking about every 10 minutes past the original > >>time, until a toothpick comes out clean... > >> > >>Dave > > > > > > Well, um, er forgive me for butting in, but your formula above is for > > square pans. To get the surface area of a round pan, the formula is pi > > * r-squared. I can't write "pi" or a superscript for "squared". So, a > > 10" pan, 10 is the diameter, 5 is the radius, 5 squared is 25, times pi > > (3.14) = 78.6 square inches > > > > The 8" pan is 50.2 square inches (pi * 16, 4 being the radius) > > > > The 8" is 64% of the 10 inch, not allowing for height. To get volume, > > multiply the square inches of the pan by the height. So if the 8" pan > > gets a 1.5" high cake, then it would have a volume of approximately > > 75 cubic inches. That's roughly equal to a 1" height in the 10" pan. > > If you make the equivalent of 2 8" cake recipes, then a 10" pan would > > have a cake height of not quite 2 inches, which would look "right" for > > that size. > > Ahem.... Note that I was comparing areas and volumes as *ratios*, > therrefore Pi was irrelevant. As did you, when you said the 8" pan was > 64% of the 10", except I said the 10" was 156% of the 8". (OK, 156.25%, > so sue me!) I then multiplied by the 125% in height, and voila - 1.95X. > > > Anyway, better living through chemistry and geometry, _this_ is why you > > need math in school! > > Cheers, > > betsy (an engineer, could you guess that?) > > Yep, and so am I... > > Dave > <snip worst example> You're right, I just saw 10x10 and figured you'd done squares. But I like my method of volumes better, to each his own. BTW, I don't use pocket protectors, who even uses pens any more? And I don't wear shirts w/ pockets anyway, just t-shirts. I do enjoy figuring things out in detail, though, that's why I like Harold McGee's books, lotsa good detail. thanks all. b |
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